The Geeks Were Rocked

D and I took a trip down to the Southgate House to catch The Faint Wednesday night. I find it’s getting harder and harder to pull me out of my comfy suburb to see a show in a smokey club – especially in the middle of the week – but every now and then one comes along that can’t be missed. This was one of those nights.

My friend’s band Eat Sugar opened and put on a solid set. People were still filtering in when they went on, so it wasn’t as packed for them as they might’ve hoped, but everyone seemed to be having a good time. Their music was a great fit with The Faint, so hopefully they picked up a few new fans and sold some discs.

The next act, The Show is the Rainbow, was a hot mess and doesn’t merit any space here. Let me just say Rainbow is a single dude onstage flailing away to prerecorded laptop tracks in some terrible, unmusical, unfunny version of Jack Black. I was cringing with his first song and cowering by the sweaty, shirtless finale.

The Faint came on about 11 and played for an hour (with a three song encore) and they completed shook the joint. For the unfamiliar, they are an electro-punk-pop band from Omaha who really started taking off around 2000. As expected they played a lot of tracks from their latest album, Fasciination, but also threw in their older, harder rocking favs as well. They brought all the AV equipment they might normally use in a much larger venue – so much that they actually had their own generator running in the ally to help power it all. On stage there was barely enough room to move. In addition to the drums, four keyboards, and lots of monitors I counted at least 6 LED light panels, 4 flood strobes, 2 spot strobes, 6 programmed scanner spots, and 2 huge video projectors. The lighting and video (mostly black and white processed collages) was intense and meshed with their sound perfectly. The audio was very good and balanced considering it can be a hard room to mix for. The bass was heavy and throbbing and the synths growled and screamed nicely. And to top it off, singer, Todd Fink, performed in a very Dr. Horrible-esque outfit. Mad scientists or not, they were legen…dary.

Tags:

Leave a Reply